On 27th August members
of CSO’s in the Rwenzori region convened to discuss the way forward towards
Human rights protections in the Oil belts of Uganda. This was at Hotel
Cornerstone in the heart of Fort portal Town. Participants included religious
leaders, opinion leaders, leaders of CSO’s, Uganda Human Right Commission staff.
Uganda is having about 2.5 billion Barrows of oil and about 100000 barrows are
produced. The present Oil in Uganda will last for 20-30yrs. About 1000 people
are currently employed in the oil sector. The government together with the oil
company plan to build a refinery in Hoima. The Oil companies in Uganda are Tullow,
CNOC and TOTAL.90% of the effects of oil happen in the transportation process
[spilling of oil]. 15% of the total revenue was supposed to be for local
government and the kingdoms but the new law allows 3% to these categories.
Is Uganda moving in the right
direction or in a dangerous sector if our leaders are not acting well to help
the country benefit from what we have as oil? What are then these human rights?
They are inalienable fundamental rights to which a person is entitled. They
apply to everyone, everywhere; they exist as natural rights and legal rights.
Human rights are universal; Article 1
and article 20 of the constitution. The principle is these rights are
universal, promote equality, apply to everyone and not separable etc. The responsibility to uphold the rights is in
right holder and duty holder. The overall responsibility of meeting human
rights rests in the state through its organs. The state must ensure
transparency in its conduct in observing these rights in the constitution.
However the oil sector has made a
population of Uganda think this would be “a curse”. This was based on what
people observed that; the signature bonus given to Uganda was never invested as
was required, there has been military interventions especially on those who
raise their voice in areas Ugandan’s right have been violated like in
Hoima,Bulisa and the surrounding villages. Land grabbing is the order of the
day. The major problem now is pollution in the oil area. What have been
observed are environmental degradation, oil spilling, and air pollution? In
Nigeria there are 1 billion barrows of oil and 30-40 thousand people are
employed in the oil sector but “violence
has attracted violence” and these are not supposed to happen in Uganda. Can
we think of a Uganda where “peace will
attract Peace” or we may need a Divine intervention for peace to prevail.
How is the construction of the refinery going to answer the fundamental
question of protecting human rights in Uganda? Does the said law answer article
23, 24,25,26,27,28,41,42 of the constitution as fear has already to be
observed? The answer was “NO”.
Participants agreed that human
rights are not observed and it now the role of all the right holders and those
in authority. Monitoring of these rights would involve; a) Tracking what is happening [measuring progress in relation to
implementation plan, situation monitoring, measuring change in a condition or
set of condition i.e. change in situation of children and women],b). Purpose [provide accountability for
implementation, improve program implementation, trigger rapid adaptation, feed
into evaluation and provide information for advocacy]. Monitoring would also
involve collection, verification and use of information to address human
rights. Monitoring aim at establishing the compliance of 2 objectives like
Respect and protect.
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